Heidelberg University succeeded in gaining support from the German Research Foundation (DFG) in the latest approval round, winning funding for two major collaborative research centres. Researchers in the natural sciences, life sciences and medicine will investigate the function of a fundamental signaling pathway in the “Mechanisms and functions of WNT signaling“ CRC (CRC 1324). The DFG also approved the Transregional CRC "Liver cancer – new mechanistic and therapeutic concepts in a solid tumour model" (CRC/TRR 209) under the auspices of the Medical Faculty Heidelberg. The team in Heidelberg will collaborate with researchers from Tübingen and Hannover on this project.
Press Release
Heidelberg, 26 May 2017
Heidelberg University Awarded Funding For Two Collaborative Research Centres
DFG grants approximately 20 million euros for both new research units
Heidelberg University succeeded in gaining support from the German Research Foundation (DFG) in the latest approval round, winning funding for two major collaborative research centres. Researchers in the natural sciences, life sciences and medicine will investigate the function of a fundamental signaling pathway in the “Mechanisms and functions of WNT signaling“ CRC (CRC 1324). The DFG also approved the Transregional CRC "Liver cancer – new mechanistic and therapeutic concepts in a solid tumour model" (CRC/TRR 209) under the auspices of the Medical Faculty Heidelberg. The team in Heidelberg will collaborate with researchers from Tübingen and Hannover on this project. Total DFG funding for the two research consortia is approximately 20 million euros for a period of four years.
CRC 1324 will focus its research on so-called Wnt proteins and their dependent molecular mechanisms, which developed quite early in the evolution of animals and also play an essential role in humans. The Collaborative Research Centre aims to unravel the mechanisms of the Wnt signaling pathway using approaches from biochemistry, biophysics, genetics and mathematics. The CRC comprises 16 subprojects and has been granted nearly 8,5 million euros in funding. Participants from Heidelberg University include researchers from the Biochemistry Center, the Centre for Organismal Studies (COS), the Institute of Applied Mathematics and the medical faculties in Heidelberg and Mannheim. Researchers from the German Cancer Research Center, the European Molecular Biology Laboratory, the Karlsruhe Institute for Technology, Göttingen University Medical Centre and Göttingen University are also participants. Prof. Dr Thomas Holstein of the COS is the group's spokesperson. CRC 1324 will begin its work in July 2017.
CRC/TRR 209 will focus on three areas of interest. The first is the mechanisms of the chronic hepatitis C and non-alcoholic fatty liver, and their common effector, chronic inflammation. The second focus is the key progression mechanisms that shape the interaction between the liver cancer cell and its environment. Researchers in the third area will follow the so-called "bench-to-bedside" process to translate promising treatment approaches into clinical practice more quickly. Research data, tissue samples and cell and mouse models will be pooled and managed in the project and be available to all the associated researchers for further scientific experiments. Collaborators in the Transregional Collaborative Research Centre include the universities of Heidelberg and Tübingen and the Hannover Medical School. It comprises 18 subprojects and has been granted approximately 11 million euros in funding. Its spokesperson is Prof. Dr. Peter Schirmacher, Medical Director of the Institute of Pathology of the Medical Faculty Heidelberg. CRC/TRR 209 will likewise begin its work in July 2017.
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